Narrated by William Dufris, with Oliver Wyman, Tavia Gilbert, and Neal Stephenson, unabridged

Macmillan Audio, 34 hours

Neal Stephenson
Neal Stephenson's background shows clearly in his
writing. He was born in Fort Meade, home of the National Security
Agency (NSA), and grew up in a family that included biochemistry,
physics, and electrical engineering professors. His own studies
included physics and geography.

Stephenson is the author of Zodiac, Snow Crash, and
the Hugo award-winning The Diamond Age. He also writes with
his uncle J. Frederick George under the pseudonym Stephen Bury.
Stephenson currently lives in the Seattle area with his family.

"Do your neighbors burn one another alive? ... Do your shamans walk around on stilts? ... When a child gets sick,
do you pray? Sacrifice to a painted stick? Or blame it on an old lady?" Thus begins Neal Stephenson's monumental
new novel of ideas and adventure. Fraa Orolo is posing these questions to an artisan from the Saecular
world who -- against orthodoxy -- has been summoned inside the walls of a monastic-style
community (the "concent") to perform a hasty, unscheduled repair. Immersed in this encounter between denizens
of separate societies, the listener begins to know a world that is, by turns, strangely familiar and suddenly
unexpected. An introductory "Note to the Listener" assures us that this world, Arbre, is not Earth, allowing
us to marvel at the similarities and puzzle out the differences.

On Arbre, the fraas and their female counterparts, the suurs -- collectively, the "avout" -- are sequestered from
the outside world, but not in pursuit of religion. Here, it is the mathematicians, scientists, and philosophers who
have shut themselves away in devotion to their discipline. The only possessions an avout can claim are his/her bolt,
chord, and sphere: the first two usually employed as garments, and the third proving equal to a startling range
of uses, from seating to lighting. All three are vestiges of a now-restricted "praxis" (or technology) known
as "newmatter." Each co-educational concent is made up of several sectors, or "maths," each operating on a
different schedule dictating its exposure to the world outside, or "extramuros."

Fraa Erasmas, the story's narrator, is a member of the Decenarian math at the concent of Saunt Edhar. As the story
opens, he and his contemporaries are preparing for Apert, the ceremonial opening of the gate between their math
and the outside world. As Decenarians (or, more informally, "Tenners"), they have waited ten years since the
last Apert. Erasmas, now just eighteen, joined the concent by way of having been "Collected" on the occasion
of the last Decenarian Apert, and eagerly anticipates the ten-day period of exploring what has changed, and
what persists, beyond the walls of Saunt Edhar's.

Anathem is part coming-of-age story, part space opera, part alternate history, part quantum mechanics
tutorial, and a completely awe-inspiring creation. Fraa Erasmas, or Raz, and his companions are witty and
engaging, and the Arbre they inhabit is a fascinating place. Stephenson allows the listener to learn gradually
and intuitively about Arbre, its past and its present, through contextual clues rather than via lengthy
exposition. The scene is set on a more or less ordinary day inside the concent, and the sprawling saga unfolds
bit by bit, as Apert comes and goes, and the excitement of the short-lived cross-pollination with the extramuros
world gives way to a sequence of unexpected occurrences within the walls of Saunt Edhar's that shake up Raz's
orderly existence and ultimately throw into question everything he thought he knew, including the very nature
of reality and consciousness.

Anathem listeners enjoy a delightful bonus that is not part of the print reading experience: short
interludes of a cappella choral chants specially composed to accompany the book play at the beginnings of the
story's thirteen Parts. Seven unexpurgated tracks of the Anathem music are available for listening
at www.nealstephenson.com/anathem/music.htm. On
the other hand, the printed book offers an advantage
unavailable to the audiobook listener, in the form of a back-of-the-book glossary comprising all of the
Dictionary entries that dot the narrative, as well as a number of additional definitions. In a story as
dense with unfamiliar terms and challenging concepts as Anathem, the listener may benefit, as I did, from
having a copy of the printed book on hand and consulting the glossary from time to time. The book contains
further bonus content in the form of three supplemental "calcas," or math problems, presented as short
illustrated dialogues between characters from the book. These support concepts that are significant to the
story, and may prove useful aids to readers unaccustomed to the strenuous mathematical thinking that is
second nature to the avout.

Despite the billing of the four readers as if Anathem were a multi-cast recording, William Dufris
is the main voice of the piece, performing all of the narration and characters' voices. Oliver Wyman reads
the introductory "Note to the Listener," and apparently nothing else. Tavia Gilbert reads no more than a
handful of the Dictionary entries that preface the Parts of the book and punctuate the text periodically
within the Parts. Author Neal Stephenson reads the majority of these Dictionary entries. While the additional
voices add spice and variety to the listening experience, it is Dufris's masterful storytelling and voice
characterizations that bring this incredibly complex book to life and make it the wonderfully rich and
satisfying listen that it is.